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Effect of pre-term birth on oxidative stress responses to normoxic and hypoxic exercise

Pre-term birth is a major health concern that occurs in approximately 10% of births worldwide. Despite high incidence rate, long-term consequences of pre-term birth remain unclear. Recent evidence suggests that elevated oxidative stress observed in pre-term born infants could persist into adulthood....

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Autores principales: Martin, Agnès, Millet, Grégoire, Osredkar, Damjan, Mramor, Minca, Faes, Camille, Gouraud, Etienne, Debevec, Tadej, Pialoux, Vincent
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7082609/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32199333
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.redox.2020.101497
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author Martin, Agnès
Millet, Grégoire
Osredkar, Damjan
Mramor, Minca
Faes, Camille
Gouraud, Etienne
Debevec, Tadej
Pialoux, Vincent
author_facet Martin, Agnès
Millet, Grégoire
Osredkar, Damjan
Mramor, Minca
Faes, Camille
Gouraud, Etienne
Debevec, Tadej
Pialoux, Vincent
author_sort Martin, Agnès
collection PubMed
description Pre-term birth is a major health concern that occurs in approximately 10% of births worldwide. Despite high incidence rate, long-term consequences of pre-term birth remain unclear. Recent evidence suggests that elevated oxidative stress observed in pre-term born infants could persist into adulthood. Given that oxidative stress is known to play an important role in response to physical activity and hypoxia, we investigated whether oxidative stress responses to acute exercise in normoxia and hypoxia may be differently modulated in pre-term vs. full-term born adults. Twenty-two pre-term born and fifteen age-matched full-term born controls performed maximal incremental cycling tests in both normoxia (FiO2: 0.21) and normobaric hypoxia (FiO2: 0.13; simulated altitude of 3800 m) in blinded and randomized manner. Plasma levels of oxidative stress (advanced oxidation protein products [AOPP] and malondialdehyde), antioxidant (ferric reducing antioxidant power, glutathione peroxidase, catalase [CAT] and superoxide dismutase [SOD]) and nitrosative stress markers (nitrotyrosine, nitrite and total nitrite and nitrate [NOx]) were measured before and immediately after each test. AOPP (+24%, P<0.001), CAT (+38%, P<0.001) and SOD (+12%, P=0.018) and NOx (+17%, P=0.024) significantly increased in response to exercise independently of condition and birth status. No difference in response to acute exercise in normoxia was noted between pre-term and full-term born adults in any of measured markers. Hypoxic exposure during exercise resulted in significant increase in AOPP (+45%, P=0.008), CAT (+55%, P=0.019) and a trend for an increase in nitrite/nitrate content (+35%, P=0.107) only in full-term and not pre-term born individuals. These results suggest that prematurely born adult individuals exhibit higher resistance to oxidative stress response to exercise in hypoxia.
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spelling pubmed-70826092020-03-24 Effect of pre-term birth on oxidative stress responses to normoxic and hypoxic exercise Martin, Agnès Millet, Grégoire Osredkar, Damjan Mramor, Minca Faes, Camille Gouraud, Etienne Debevec, Tadej Pialoux, Vincent Redox Biol Research Paper Pre-term birth is a major health concern that occurs in approximately 10% of births worldwide. Despite high incidence rate, long-term consequences of pre-term birth remain unclear. Recent evidence suggests that elevated oxidative stress observed in pre-term born infants could persist into adulthood. Given that oxidative stress is known to play an important role in response to physical activity and hypoxia, we investigated whether oxidative stress responses to acute exercise in normoxia and hypoxia may be differently modulated in pre-term vs. full-term born adults. Twenty-two pre-term born and fifteen age-matched full-term born controls performed maximal incremental cycling tests in both normoxia (FiO2: 0.21) and normobaric hypoxia (FiO2: 0.13; simulated altitude of 3800 m) in blinded and randomized manner. Plasma levels of oxidative stress (advanced oxidation protein products [AOPP] and malondialdehyde), antioxidant (ferric reducing antioxidant power, glutathione peroxidase, catalase [CAT] and superoxide dismutase [SOD]) and nitrosative stress markers (nitrotyrosine, nitrite and total nitrite and nitrate [NOx]) were measured before and immediately after each test. AOPP (+24%, P<0.001), CAT (+38%, P<0.001) and SOD (+12%, P=0.018) and NOx (+17%, P=0.024) significantly increased in response to exercise independently of condition and birth status. No difference in response to acute exercise in normoxia was noted between pre-term and full-term born adults in any of measured markers. Hypoxic exposure during exercise resulted in significant increase in AOPP (+45%, P=0.008), CAT (+55%, P=0.019) and a trend for an increase in nitrite/nitrate content (+35%, P=0.107) only in full-term and not pre-term born individuals. These results suggest that prematurely born adult individuals exhibit higher resistance to oxidative stress response to exercise in hypoxia. Elsevier 2020-03-05 /pmc/articles/PMC7082609/ /pubmed/32199333 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.redox.2020.101497 Text en © 2020 The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Research Paper
Martin, Agnès
Millet, Grégoire
Osredkar, Damjan
Mramor, Minca
Faes, Camille
Gouraud, Etienne
Debevec, Tadej
Pialoux, Vincent
Effect of pre-term birth on oxidative stress responses to normoxic and hypoxic exercise
title Effect of pre-term birth on oxidative stress responses to normoxic and hypoxic exercise
title_full Effect of pre-term birth on oxidative stress responses to normoxic and hypoxic exercise
title_fullStr Effect of pre-term birth on oxidative stress responses to normoxic and hypoxic exercise
title_full_unstemmed Effect of pre-term birth on oxidative stress responses to normoxic and hypoxic exercise
title_short Effect of pre-term birth on oxidative stress responses to normoxic and hypoxic exercise
title_sort effect of pre-term birth on oxidative stress responses to normoxic and hypoxic exercise
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7082609/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32199333
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.redox.2020.101497
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